Would you be upset if the cashier did not give you any pennies back with your change?

I hope this catches on. If enough businesses start doing this, maybe the governmnet will finally get around to dumping the penny.

I have $65 in pennies and nickels sitting on my dresser waiting to be taken to the bank. I want my pennies.

It’s to balance out the decades of paying the extra 1/10 of a cent on every gallon.

I’d probably notice and think “good for him!” It would be an unlikely math error, and frankly, the time spent fiddling with pennies is worth more to me, him, and the owner of the store than a couple of cents change. Everyone wins, and the money balances out in the end. I do like the idea of having a penny jar for the tightwads who think they’re being cheated. I wonder how many of them would take the pennies their owed?

For those who wouldn’t take the pennies if they were available, but nevertheless would be upset if the pennies were kept from them, I wonder how you get through life. I find I have more than enough minor annoyances and small insults to worry about in my life without spending emotional energy on things I wouldn’t even fix if I could!

Oh, and if I were the cashier and someone complained…

…I’d hand them a nickle.

I wouldn’t care if I didn’t get pennies pack. I also don’t think that most people would care if they didn’t get them back. Whenever I give them back as change about half put them in the “give a penny, take a penny” thing, and the othert half waits for the one penny change that they get with a .99 bottle of water.

But who’ll think of the strippers!!

I thought I was a very cheap person. Then I read this:

and the rest of this thread.

And another of my notions of self has been obliterated.

The better solution is to just add the blasted tax to each item, and then round to the nearest 5 cents (like a VAT) then setting the price. This way, no one is ‘cheated’ of their money. Plus, the price displayed is the price you pay.

I don’t get it. Why are there still prices ending in something else than .05,.10,.15, etc… , then?

Clairobscur, the Netherlands didn’t abolish the 1 and 2 eurocent pieces.

All that was done was to grant stores the right to round off price-totals to the nearest 5 ct mark. If a customer pays with a credit card, prices aren’t rounded off. But most large stores no longer are legally obliged to give back 1 and 2 cent coins if the real change would be less then 3 cent.

When South Africa got rid of its 1c and 2c coins most large retailer’s POS systems automatically rounded your purchase price down to the nearest 5c.

I don’t really recall but I imagine the smaller retailers did something similar.

Right now, my change pouch contains one fifty-cent coin… and a whole bunch of pennies.

I cannot use pennies in any coin-operated device. If I want to pay the exact amount of a purchase in cash, I dig them out of my pouch and make people wait behind me in the lunch lineup. If I just throw a ten-dollar bill at the cashier, they have to dig out the pennies. The cafeteria people often object to too many pennies donated to the save-a-penny/tip dish at the till.

Pennies seem more and more to just be in the way.

When I spent 6 months in Switzerland in 1967, most merchants didn’t give use rappen (1/100 of a franc) any more. A few did, but most didn’t. They rounded up or down as appropriate. A rappen in 1967 was worth about 1/4 cent then and probably a couple cents in today’s money. By 1970, they had completely disappeared and no one seemed to mind. After all, when I was growing up, a penny was still worth something. An ice cream cone cost 5c and a piece of bubble gum from a machine was 1c. Today, an ice cream cone is well over a dollar and bubble gum from a machine costs a quarter. So it is absurd to keep the pennies.

Someone above mentioned that he has a jar of 6500 pennies. I’ll bet they stay there. I think we all have jars of pennies. What good are they doing staying in a jar? In fact, a good case could be made for getting rid of nickels and dimes too.

Everyone remember the story of Lincoln and the 2c. That story makes a lot more sense if we consider that a penny then may have the buying power of today’s dollar. But that was the smallest coin in circulation and people managed.